| Literature DB >> 24428955 |
Peter Koch1, Anja Schablon, Ute Latza, Albert Nienhaus.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Musculoskeletal pain may be triggered by physical strains and psychosocial risk factors. The effort-reward imbalance model (ERI model) is a stress model which measures psychosocial factors in the working world. The question is whether workers with an effort-reward imbalance report musculoskeletal pain more frequently than those with no effort-reward imbalance. A systematic review using a best evidence synthesis approach was conducted to answer this question.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24428955 PMCID: PMC3898401 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-37
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Quality assessment criteria
| All | A specific objective has been clearly formulated. | |
| All | The response rate is at least 80%. | |
| Prospective | The response rate is at least 80% after at least one year or the non-responders are not selective. | |
| Case–control | Cases and controls originate from the same population and there is a clear definition of cases and controls. | |
| All | The original ERI questionnaire was used, including the ascertainment of over-commitment. | |
| All | Data on physical work-related stress was collected and taken into account in the analysis. | |
| Case–control | Prospective enrolment was used (identification of new cases and selection of controls occurs at the same time). | |
| Prospective | Follow-up completed at least one year later. | |
| All | Risk predictors including confidence intervals or p-values were calculated and confounding was controlled for. |
Evidence categories for observational studies - based on Ariëns et al. [18]
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| Moreover, inconclusive evidence was defined as findings of only one cross-sectional study, irrespective of the quality of the study. |
Figure 1Flow chart of the inclusion process.
Results by population
| Healthcare workers | 2,194 | P: 31% | 10.7% | > 1, tertiles, continuous | Upper extremities | | ||
| 167 | P: 13% | - | Tertiles | Upper/lower extremities, neck, shoulders, back | | |||
| 367 | - | - | Tertiles | General MSDs | | |||
| 21,516 | P: 38–48% | - | Tertiles | Neck, lower back | Three facility types | |||
| 664 | NA | - | Continuous | Upper/lower extremities, neck, back | | |||
| Passenger transport companies | 316 | P: 24–70% | 15% | > 1 | Upper/lower extremities, neck, shoulders, back, hips | Six pain localisations | ||
| 316 | P: 16–51% | 23–64% | Tertiles | Neck, shoulders, back, hips | Four pain localisations | |||
| 1,179 | I: 25–26% | - | Quartiles, continuous | Lower back, neck | Two pain localisations | |||
| 1,325 | P: 19–59% | 42–46% | > 1 | General MSDs | Three occupational groups | |||
| Public authorities | 1,803 | - | 5.4% | > 1 | Neck, shoulders, back, arms, feet | | ||
| 2,431 | I: 5.6–11% | 27–28% | > 1 | Neck, shoulders, lower back, upper extremities | Gender | |||
| Bank/insurance companies | 247 | P: 34% | - | > 1 | Lower back | | ||
| Random sample from the general population | 11,175 | P: 11% | - | Tertiles | Upper/lower extremities, nape of neck, shoulders, back | | ||
| 2,613 | P: 22–29% | 24–30% | > 1 | Upper/lower extremities, shoulders, back | Gender | |||
| Vineyard workers | 3,947 | P: 21–58% | 8–13% | > 1 | Upper/lower extremities, nape of neck, shoulders, back | Gender | ||
| Dental technicians | 105 | - | - | > 1 | Upper extremities, nape of neck, shoulders, back | | ||
| Call centre operatives | 165 | I: 52% | 3% | > 1, continuous | Nape of neck and shoulders, right and left upper extremities | Three pain localisations | ||
| Cleaners | 439 | P: 56% | 54% | > 1, quartiles, continuous | Shoulders | | ||
| Police officers | 480 | P: 13–50% | 19–66% | > 1 | Nape of neck, shoulders, back, hips | Four pain localisations |
Legend: P= prevalence, I = Incidence, C-S = Cross-sectional study, PC = Prospective cohort study, C-C = Case-control study, NA = not applicable.
Results of the hypotheses
| Health care workers | + | ↑ | | | | | High | ||
| + | ↑ | | | | | Moderate | |||
| + | ↑ | - | ↓ | + | ↑ | High | |||
| + + + | ↑ | | | | | High | |||
| + | ↑ | | | | | Moderate | |||
| Passenger transport companies | - - - + - - | ↓ | + - - + - + | ↑ | | | High | ||
| - - + + | ↑ | - + - - | ↓ | | | High | |||
| + + | ↑ | | | | | High | |||
| + - - | ↓ | | | | | Moderate | |||
| Public authorities | + | ↑ | + | ↑ | - | ↓ | High | ||
| + - | ↑ | | | - | ↓ | High | |||
| Banks/insurance companies | - | ↓ | + - - - | ↓ | | | High | ||
| Random sample from the general population | + | ↑ | | | - | ↓ | Moderate | ||
| + + | ↑ | | | | | Moderate | |||
| Vineyard workers | + + - + - - - - | ↓ | - + + - - + - - | ↓ | - | ↓ | High | ||
| Dental technicians | - | ↓ | + | ↑ | | | High | ||
| Call centre operatives | - + - | ↓ | | | | | High | ||
| Cleaners | + | ↑ | | | | | High | ||
| Police officers | + + - + | ↑ | + + - - | ↑ | High |
Legend: + = Positive statistically significant association, - = No statistically significant association, ↑= Hypothesis confirmed, ↓= Hypothesis not confirmed, C-S = Cross-sectional study, PC = Prospective cohort study, C-C = Case-control study.